“We don't have much
time left as Christians in this region,” Archbishop Bashar
Warda of Erbil told a gathering of cross-party UK MPs and
peers.

“As a Catholic I find it hard to say, but I want military
action, there is no other way now.”

He warned that Iraq's Christian population has declined
“dramatically” over the last decade, from 1.4 million
during the rule of Saddam Hussein.

He called for the deployment of British troops to push Islamic
State (also known as ISIS, or ISIL) away from the Christian
villages of the Nineveh Plain.

Erbil is the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan in
Iraq, which is struggling with the influx of more than 120,000
Christians fleeing ISIS.

Archbishop Warda said: “I beg you to focus on the need for
military action. What we are seeing is worse for the world than
what happened in Afghanistan, with more and more young people
going to fight with Daesh [ISIS]. Military action is needed –
powerful force – to get them out of our villages.”

Britain’s Prince Charles has also recently expressed his
“deep concern” for Christians in the Middle East.

Tens of thousands of Iraqi Christians and Yazidis fled their
homes in the summer of 2014 following warnings from ISIS
militants to renounce their faith or face death.

The plight of Christians in Erbil was also witnessed by a
delegation from the Church of England.

Rt Rev Geoffrey Rowell, an Anglican bishop who retired in 2013,
visited Erbil and Iraqi Kurdistan in December on behalf of the
Archbishop of Canterbury. He was hosted by Archbishop Warda.

The visit was intended to show “an expression of solidarity
with the local Christian community; to see at first hand the
needs of the many internally displaced people who, then and now,
look to the churches” for help, Rowell said on his return.

“Education is a priority both for the ‘settled’ Christian
community of Erbil, and for the displaced,” he added.

Aside from seeing an urgent need for housing, clothing, food and
heating for Christian communities, Rowell said: “We also saw
– and were frequently told – that hope needs to be maintained:
what those who have fled want is a return to their villages, and
ISIS expelled from the Nineveh Plain, and, if possible
Mosul.”

He said that support is needed to help people resettle and to
become reconciled with their Muslim neighbors, some of whom were
seen as having betrayed Christians.

“The Iraqi Army and the Kurdish Peshmerga forces do not
engender sufficient trust to be seen as safeguarding Christian
returnees – some kind of international guarantor would also be
needed,” Rowell added.